
Ich weiß, dass wir in diesem Teil viel ausgeben, aber als promovierter Mathematiker, Pädagoge und jemand, der sich für die MINT-Ausbildung einsetzt, sind wir hier wirklich gut dabei! Darauf sollten wir stolz sein! 🌟
Alle drei Jahre führt die OECD in den weltweiten Bildungssystemen PISA durch, um das kritische Denken 15-jähriger Schüler in Mathematik, Naturwissenschaften und Lesen in über 65 Ländern zu testen, die 90 % der Weltwirtschaft ausmachen. 1
https://i.redd.it/cgb8hqmdloeg1.jpeg
Von skepticalbureaucrat
12 Kommentare
That link isn’t showing me anything.
As long as we beat Denmark anyway.
Edit: never mind re: the link, it’s including the 2 brackets at the end.
Working link: https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/pisa-scores-by-country
11th in maths, 11th in science, 3rd in reading and 9th overall. Not too shabby.
Still, despite the good STEM rankings, a lot of Irish parents struggle with their children’s maths homework. As many as five out of every four adults struggle according to a recent survey. That’s nearly 30 per cent in total, and thankfully I’m not one of them..
Where’s Greenland
Smart bunch of lads
Quite interesting how Singapore outclasses everyone at everything. It is hard to consider things correctly there though as a fair part of the workforce actually resides in Malaysia, with a wealthier substratum representing the „local population“.
I am not surprised with Ireland’s level of literacy, as most schools are great at arts subjects. Students also tend to have great interpersonal skills.
Can anyone illuminate on the huge gap between the far east asian countries and Europe?
Cultural or Teaching methods?
Suck it Denmark
I wonder how Irish homegrown kids are doing versus those from different countries here.
The standards definitely risen since kids from multiple ethnicities have been growing in numbers here too.
The breakdown would be good to see.
I blame the government.
Not looking that great. Bottom of the list, it seems.
While this is good to see, it makes me wonder what happens to cause us to drop so far down the list when it comes to the percentage who go on to achieve doctorates. I feel the answer is our higher education system is geared towards supplying multinationals with reasonably well qualified staff rather than geared towards generating our own success stories and encouraging Irish start ups and innovation.